At the end
of the Chicago NABC and for a few days after returning home, I was mainly
trying to figure out Atlanta Labor Day regional plans. Nothing was too
appealing, so I asked Irma if she'd like to go with me to the Greek Bridge
Festival in Athens going on at the same time. Irma was one bright spot from an otherwise annoying Chicago
trip, so I thought this could be fun. I wasn’t entirely sure how serious I was about
this since I had only known her about a week, but she was very interested in
the trip so we made it happen.
It has been five
years since I had been outside the U.S./Canada (by far the longest I’ve
ever gone without a Europe trip). Each summer I toy with the idea of
going to a bridge festival in Greece or France, but I’ve just never had anyone I
like enough who also wants to go. The day after I made my plans, my aunt and uncle and
cousin made arrangements to come from Berlin for a couple of days so it was
nice to get to see them too. Yay.
As with any long trip to an unfamiliar place with unfamiliar people there are some problems, but it was basically fun – a steady routine of daytime visits around Athens, one session of bridge each night, and bars until the wee hours.
Irma and I didn't play so well the first 5 days in open and mixed pairs, and by the end of day 5, I think we were both ready to go
home. However, we stuck it out and played the Swiss team event with a very nice and
decent Greek pair - Thanos and Stefanos.
We needed
something good to happen to feel good about the trip, our bridge play, and our friendship. The final two days were much better on all counts.
Non-bridge players stop here. Bridge players, please read on.
Non-bridge players stop here. Bridge players, please read on.
Going into the
last round of the Swiss we were in 9th place and up against our friends Tom
Paske, Jason Hackett, Giannis Oikonomopoulos and his dad. With a close match we
would both make the overalls but with a big win one of us could sneak into the
top 5. Here are a few interesting boards from that round.
On the
second board (#22), Tom had this defensive problem against my 4NT, knowing I
have a weak NT with 4 hearts.
Dummy (on
your left): ♠8643 ♥K7
♦AKJ862 ♣A
Your hand: ♠A52 ♥JT982
♦5 ♣9642
The ♥J lead was won in dummy with partner
playing the 6 (upside down). A, K, a diamond to partner, assume you discard a
discouraging club and a low heart. Then partner leads the ♥5 to declarer's A, ♣A,
then 3 more diamonds. What are your three discards? Partner throws the clubs
starting with the Q.
You know 9
of declarer's points (♥AQ,
♣K) and can count eight tricks for
him (5 diamonds ♥AK and ♣A) so
if you get in with the spade and lead a heart or club, that gives declarer the
entry to score the ♥Q
and ♣K he can't otherwise
get to. So there's no reason to keep any clubs. Yes, if I held QJx or KJ(x) or
KQ(x), all fairly reasonable holdings for this auction, there is nothing that
can be done, but on the actual deal I help ♠QJ-doubleton, and Tom didn’t work out the position.
On board 24
in third seat none vul I picked up ♠AQ98
♥KJ4
♦9 ♣Q7653
and opened 1♠. It proceeded: 2♥-2♠-P; P-X-P-P. I seriously considered running to 3♣ – spades are almost certainly 5-1
or 6-0 and we probably have a club fit that will split nicer. Fortunately I
passed out 2♠X and this is what
Irma produced: ♠743 ♥QT53
♦A7654 ♣K.
Tom led ♦K. I won and knocked out the ♣A. Now a trump and I was able to
score two minor suit tricks, four trumps in hand, and two club ruffs to bring
in 470. Leading trumps on opening lead wouldn’t help because Tom couldn’t lead
a second trump when in with the club. He could get to Jason by playing A and a
heart so Jason could lead a second trump, but then they lose trump control and
I could just ruff one club, draw trumps and have heart winners.
The next
board (#17) they tried too hard to make up for the previous bad scores. Tom
held ♠KQJ ♥KQT2 ♦AJ642
♣J. I opened on his right: 3♣-X-4♣-X; P-? He opted to pass this and hope for 500 on pure
power or that 4♥ wouldn’t make. Nothing to the play. We went down 1 and 4♥ makes exactly 4.
Board 19
put the nail in the coffin. At my table Jason, in third seat favorable, tried
responding to 1♣ with 1♥ holding ♠J64 ♥T86 ♦KT853 ♣Q6. I like this tactical bid in this state of the
match. The whole auction: 1♣-P-1♥-1♠; 2♣-2♥-P-4♠; P-P-5♣; X-P-P-P. This was a good sac (down 3 for 500).
Oikonomopoulos bid ambitiously on our cards to 6♠.
♠AT32 ♥AQ74 ♦7642
♣3
♠KQ987 ♥KJ6 ♦AJ
♣T98
A diamond
lead kills the slam off the bat, but our teammates understandably led a big
club. Now the contract can be made by finding the jack of spades: ruff one club
low, ruff another club high, then finesse for the jack. I don't know the
bidding at their table, but it’s not so clear to take that line of play.
Knowing clubs are 7-2 swings the percentage in favor that line over one of the
others (ruff the third round of clubs with the ten and be sure to pick up
trumps, or ruff third round of clubs high and play for the ♠J to drop doubleton, or draw two
rounds of trumps before ruffing the third round of clubs), but it’s still not
clear.
The final
tally was 38-6 in our favor. We moved all the way to 4th for a
decent payout, just .09 VP behind the high-powered Milner team.
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